A veteran pitcher that was non-tendered on
Friday could be a fit for the Pittsburgh Pirates During the tenure
of Ray Searage as the team’s pitching
coach the Pittsburgh Pirates have been known for acquiring reclamation projects
for their pitching staff. Joel Hanrahan, A.J. Burnett, Jason Grilli, Mark Melancon, Francisco Liriano, Edinson Volquez, J.A. Happ, and Richard Rodriguez are all among the
pitchers the Pirates have brought in during Searage’s tenure that Uncle Ray has
helped to get their careers back on track.
So far this offseason the Pirates
have been busy. However, they have not added to their Major League pitching
staff yet. Odds are, this will change as Neal Huntington is always looking to
add pitching. A starting pitcher that is available and may interest the Pirates
is veteran righty Mike Fiers.
An eight-year MLB veteran, Fiers
has pitched for the Brewers, Astros, Tigers, and A’s. He owns a 4.04 ERA, 4.35
FIP, and a 21.8% strikeout rate in 898 career innings pitched. His 898 innings
of work comes across 172 games, with 153 of them being starts.
Since 2012, using fWAR, Fiers has
been worth at least 1.7 wins every year except for two. These two seasons were
2013 (-0.5) and 2017 (0.1). Last season, Fiers carried an fWAR of 1.4 to go
with a 3.56 ERA.
However, due to problems with the
long ball and a declining strikeout rate, Fiers owned a 4.75 FIP last season.
Fiers’ 19.5% strikeout rate in 2018 was the second lowest of his career, while his
1.67 HR/9 was the second highest. His home run rate was only topped by the 1.88
HR/9 he allowed in 2017.
Fixing the home run issue Fiers
has had the past two seasons could turn him back into the pitcher owned a 3.88
ERA and a 3.93 FIP in 95 starts from 2012 through 2016. And PNC Park alone
could help to fix Fiers with his struggles with the long ball.
Fiers struggled with his slider
and changeup in 2018. Opposing batters slugged .514 off of his slider in 2018
and .537 off of his changeup. He also allowed more home runs off of these two
pitches than he did his other three pitches combined.
Tweaking his slider, which is
something Searage has had success doing with Chad Kuhl and Jameson Taillon in recent seasons,
could prove to be beneficial for Fiers. He would also benefit from throwing his
curveball (31.4% whiff rate, .181 slugging percentage in 2018) more often.
Again, this is where Searage would come into play.
The Pittsburgh Pirates love to
bring in reclamation project pitchers, and for good reason. No team in baseball
has had as much success with reclamation projects on the hill than the Pirates
the past seven seasons. After being non-tendered by the A’s on Friday, Mike
Fiers could be the next Pirate reclamation project.
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